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Archival Ecologies: In the Burn Zone

38 min · 6 de mar de 2024
portada del episodio Archival Ecologies: In the Burn Zone

Descripción

We’re excited to share Archival Ecologies with you!   It’s an original audio series created and hosted by Jayme Collins, who’s a postdoctoral scholar at Princeton University’s High Meadows Environmental Institute. Archival Ecologies is produced by Blue Lab — an environmental media and storytelling group at Princeton led by Professor Allison Carruth.  Kouvenda Media partnered with Blue Lab on multiple projects, including working with Jayme and her team on Archival Ecologies.   Archival Ecologies investigates how fires, floods, mold blooms and other ecological events are affecting cultural collections and the artifacts and memories they preserve. As climate change leads to more extreme weather events, the interactions between archives and the environments where they reside are becoming increasingly frequent and fraught.  During the 2021 summer heatwave in the Pacific Northwest, the historic town of Lytton, BC and nearby First Nations reserves suffered a catastrophic wildfire that took local archives, museums and cultural collections with it. In this first season, the podcast tells the stories of those collections and the communities who have stewarded them.   Through the voices of those cultural stewards and knowledge keepers and the objects that have been lost (or salvaged), Archival Ecologies explores the interwoven histories and geographies of the region and the larger intersections between climate change, cultural preservation and recovery.  Listen to Archival Ecologies and other @bluelab.princeton productions at bluelab.princeton.edu [https://bluelab.princeton.edu] and wherever you listen to podcasts.   Links of interest:  https://bluelab.allisoncarruth.com/projects/stories/archival-ecologies/ [https://bluelab.allisoncarruth.com/projects/stories/archival-ecologies/]

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24 episodios

episode Archival Ecologies: In the Burn Zone artwork

Archival Ecologies: In the Burn Zone

We’re excited to share Archival Ecologies with you!   It’s an original audio series created and hosted by Jayme Collins, who’s a postdoctoral scholar at Princeton University’s High Meadows Environmental Institute. Archival Ecologies is produced by Blue Lab — an environmental media and storytelling group at Princeton led by Professor Allison Carruth.  Kouvenda Media partnered with Blue Lab on multiple projects, including working with Jayme and her team on Archival Ecologies.   Archival Ecologies investigates how fires, floods, mold blooms and other ecological events are affecting cultural collections and the artifacts and memories they preserve. As climate change leads to more extreme weather events, the interactions between archives and the environments where they reside are becoming increasingly frequent and fraught.  During the 2021 summer heatwave in the Pacific Northwest, the historic town of Lytton, BC and nearby First Nations reserves suffered a catastrophic wildfire that took local archives, museums and cultural collections with it. In this first season, the podcast tells the stories of those collections and the communities who have stewarded them.   Through the voices of those cultural stewards and knowledge keepers and the objects that have been lost (or salvaged), Archival Ecologies explores the interwoven histories and geographies of the region and the larger intersections between climate change, cultural preservation and recovery.  Listen to Archival Ecologies and other @bluelab.princeton productions at bluelab.princeton.edu [https://bluelab.princeton.edu] and wherever you listen to podcasts.   Links of interest:  https://bluelab.allisoncarruth.com/projects/stories/archival-ecologies/ [https://bluelab.allisoncarruth.com/projects/stories/archival-ecologies/]

6 de mar de 202438 min
episode FWTW Ep 13: Supporting Survivors of Violence artwork

FWTW Ep 13: Supporting Survivors of Violence

From Words to Weapons Episode 13 features a panel discussion about supporting survivors of violence.   The conversation focuses on how policy takes shape to support survivors of violence, how the definition of crime versus violence can affect whether someone qualifies for support, and the impact of the Victims of Crime Act or VOCA. The discussion also touches on various challenges including funding cuts and how violence often goes underreported as well as policy solutions.  The panel discussion was hosted by the Women of Fels at the University of Pennsylvania’s Fels Institute of Government and presented in partnership with the Anti-Violence Partnership of Philadelphia, Morgan State University's Department of Nursing and Obscured.   The moderator for the discussion is Natasha Danielá de Lima McGlynn, executive director of the Anti-Violence Partnership of Philadelphia. The panelists are Adara Combs, who is the Victim Advocate in Philadelphia and a former prosecutor in the district attorney’s office; Jahlee Hatchett, who is chair of the Citizens Police Oversight Commission or CPOC in Philadelphia, where he was previously a prosecutor and currently an attorney specializing in employment, civil rights and municipal liability cases; and Maija Anderson, who is Chair of the Department of Nursing at Morgan State University and also works as a forensic nurse and sexual assault nurse examiner.  Our FWTW series focused on Maija Anderson’s work in Episode 7 and her efforts to develop a protocol for caring for survivors of law enforcement trauma. Episode 5 in the series also focused on accountability and the Citizens Police Oversight Commission or CPOC, which Jahlee Hatchett chairs.    Our special thanks to Natasha Danielá de Lima McGlynn, Nicole Mahia, Adara Combs, Jahlee Hatchett, Maija Anderson, Colleen Bonner, the Women of Fels and the University of Pennsylvania’s Fels Institute of Government for making this panel discussion possible. And to the Independence Public Media Foundation.   Links of interest:  https://www.fels.upenn.edu/ [https://www.fels.upenn.edu/]  https://avpphila.org/ [https://avpphila.org/]  https://www.phila.gov/departments/office-of-the-victim-advocate/ [https://www.phila.gov/departments/office-of-the-victim-advocate/]  https://www.phila.gov/departments/citizens-police-oversight-commission/ [https://www.phila.gov/departments/citizens-police-oversight-commission/]  https://www.morgan.edu/schp/nursing [https://www.morgan.edu/schp/nursing]  Have Nurses Turned a Blind Eye? [https://journals.lww.com/ajnonline/abstract/2007/12000/have_nurses_turned_a_blind_eye_.2.aspx] (Anderson, Maija and Bailey, Mary; American Journal of Nursing)  Developing a Model of Forensic Care To Victims of Police Violence [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jan.15313] (Anderson, Maija and Callari-Robinson, Jacqueline; NNVAWI Conference)

28 de feb de 202457 min